Thanks. With
it works. But i think i had to add +1 to:
I still fail to understand why.
To me it looks like the while loop reads one line at a time,
allocates memory to linelist[index],
then sets linelist[index] to be the line read with getline,
and increments index +1,
so that during the next run of the loop the next element of linelist will be set.
(Obviously it doesn't, but i can't see why).
All ..
I am having a pointer array . And trying to store the addess into that pointer array . please see below the problem i faced
code:
int cnt1;
char *t_array;
char *f_array;
for(cnt1=0; cnt1<1000; cnt1++)
{
t_array =... (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I need some help with arrays. I need to take input from the user for hostname, username and password until he enters .(dot) or any other character and store the values in the variable array.
I would further connect to the hostname using username and passwd and copy files from server to... (7 Replies)
hi i have a file as follows:
1
2
3
4
5
6
i want to store all these numbers in an array using awk.. so far i have:
awk '{for(i=1;i<=NR;i++) {a=$1}} END {for(i=1;i<=NR;i++) {printf("%1.11f",a)}}' 1.csv > test
however, i am getting all values as zero in the "test" file..... (3 Replies)
i have a file called file.txt having the following entries.
2321
2311
2313
4213
i wnat to store these values in a list and i want to iterate the list using loop and store it in another list (1 Reply)
Hi Guys,
I have a file which is as follows:
1
2
4
6
7
I am trying to store these values in an array in bash. I have the following script:
FILE=try.txt
ARRAY=(`awk '{print}' $FILE`)
echo ${ARRAY} (3 Replies)
i'm trying to figure out how to store strings into an array, can someone help me figure it out?
i would like to store the following for example:
array = "dog"
array = "cat"
the inputs are coming from the command line.
Thanks, (6 Replies)
Hi,
I want keep/save one command's output in an array and later want to iterate over the array one by one for some processing. instead of doing like below-
for str in `cat /etc/passwd | awk -F: '$3 >100 {print $1}' | uniq`
want to store-
my_array = `cat /etc/passwd | awk -F: '$3 >100 {print... (4 Replies)
Hi Community,
Would love to get some quick help on below requirement.
I am trying to process mpstat output from multiple blades of my server
I would like to assign this the output to an array and then use it for post processing. How can I use a two dimensional array and assign these value
... (23 Replies)
Hi,
I have written the below script to get the timestamp of each files and result is as below
Script
find /home/user -type f -name "*.json" -printf '%Tc %p\n' | awk {'print $1 " " $2 " " $3 " " $4 " " $5 " " $6 " " $7'}
Input
-rw-r--r-- 1 user domain users 17382 Jul 19 06:10... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: nextStep
5 Replies
LEARN ABOUT HPUX
tar
tar(4) Kernel Interfaces Manual tar(4)NAME
tar - format of tar tape archive
DESCRIPTION
The header structure produced by (see tar(1)) is as follows (the array size defined by the constants is shown on the right):
All characters are represented in ASCII. There is no padding used in the header block; all fields are contiguous.
The fields magic, uname, and gname are null-terminated character strings. The fields name, linkname, and prefix are null-terminated char-
acter strings except when all characters in the array contain non-null characters, including the last character. The version field is two
bytes containing the characters (zero-zero). The typeflag contains a single character. All other fields are leading-zero-filled octal
numbers in ASCII. Each numeric field is terminated by one or more space or null characters.
The name and the prefix fields produce the pathname of the file. The hierarchical relationship of the file is retained by specifying the
pathname as a path prefix, with a slash character and filename as the suffix. If the prefix contains non-null characters, prefix, a slash
character, and name are concatenated without modification or addition of new characters to produce a new pathname. In this manner, path-
names of at most 256 characters can be supported. If a pathname does not fit in the space provided, the format-creating utility notifies
the user of the error, and no attempt is made to store any part of the file, header, or data on the medium.
SEE ALSO tar(1)STANDARDS CONFORMANCE tar(4)